Valga railway station built by German prisoners of war
Karinis miestas

Foto: Mart Mõniste
097_20190706-AT-DSC00721_1.jpg
097_20190706-AT-DSC00722_1.jpg
ERMFk2644_12235_1.jpg
ERMFk2644_12238_1.jpg
ERMFk2644_12239_1.jpg
ERMFk2644_12242_1.jpg
VaMF2553_3_1.jpg
VaMF295_8_1.jpg
 Jaama 18, Valga, Estija, Valgamaa
 +372 766 1699
 Valga Külastuskeskus
238

The main building of Valga railway station (Leningrad Transport Planning Office, architect: Viktor Tsipulin) was completed in 1949. It is an elongated two-storey structure with an avant-corps and a hipped roof, its architectural showpiece being its seven-storey square tower. It is one of the best and most remarkable examples of Stalinist architecture in Estonia. Its original state having been so well preserved further elevates its significance. The railway station was built shortly after World War II in place of a building from the imperial era that Soviet bombing had razed to the ground. Since German prisoners of war were detained in Valga, it is plausible that they were used to construct it.

 

Panaudoti šaltiniai ir literatūra:

National Heritage Board registry of cultural monuments. https://register.muinas.ee/public.php?menuID=monument&action=view&id=30431

Susijusi laiko juosta

Susijusi istorija

From Adolf Ers' book "Vidzeme in the Freedom Fights" about the life of refugees in Valka

From the time of the refugees, Valka agreed to play a more important role than other cities in Vidzeme, because the politically active newspaper Līdums was located here, where Latvia's spiritual and political weapons were minted, and also because there was a crossroads where roads from three On the Latvian side: from Riga, Alūksne, Mozekile, and also from Estonia and Russia, she had links with refugees everywhere - in Tartu, Pliskava, Moscow and St. Petersburg. There was a large refugee center here.